The Shimmer

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The Shimmer Page 30

by David Morrell


  The pilot ran to a truck, hoping to use it to drive Colonel Raleigh out of the sun, but the truck refused to start. Every other vehicle also refused to start. The best he could do was give the colonel elementary first aid and struggle to carry him into a hangar. There the pilot found the corpses of numerous military personnel, all of whom were covered with blood from their ears, noses, tear ducts, mouths, and other orifices. Some faces had hemorrhaged so badly that their skin had disintegrated.

  The corpses were in positions that suggested a desperate effort to take cover, huddling against walls or aircraft or equipment. At least twelve soldiers seemed to have shot one another. Moans led the pilot to a few survivors, all of whom were bleeding, semiconscious, and delirious.

  When the pilot radioed his report, he was told to stand by. Ten minutes later, an authoritative voice told him, “Stay where you are. Try to help Colonel Raleigh. Do not go anywhere else on the base. Two C-45s are being dispatched with a medical team. After they arrive, return to Fort Bliss and report immediately for debriefing. With that exception, do not discuss what you’ve seen with anyone. I repeat-do not go anywhere else on the base.”

  While the first C-45 did in fact carry medical personnel, the second brought a security team whose purpose was to investigate the integrity of the underground facility. A similar scene of devastation awaited them: most of the men dead from burns and hemorrhages, a few survivors moaning in pain. Again some victims seemed to have shot one another. Blood covered the walls.

  Within three days, the airbase was shut down. The official explanation for the deaths was that a massive fuel leak had caused a devastating fire. The planes and other equipment were removed to various other bases. The entrance to the underground facility was sealed. Signs warned trespassers about unexploded bombs.

  75

  Lockhart and the special-ops team hurried away from the beam of light. Clutching their M4s, they reached the hole the rocket had made when it blasted the concrete shed. Stairs led downward, where a glow revealed smoke.

  “We came with tear-gas capability,” the special-ops leader told him.

  They pulled gas masks from their equipment backpacks. Motioning for him to stay back, they hurried down the stairs.

  Lockhart crouched to protect himself from the heat that the beam of light gave off.

  “I see a trip wire!” a voice yelled.

  “Step over it! Stupid bastard should have hidden it better!”

  Lockhart heard boots clattering farther down the metal stairs. Without warning, he was thrown back by the force of an explosion below. Another trip wire! he realized. Landing hard on rubble, he groaned from the pain. Screams at the bottom of the stairs dwindled until the only sound was the hiss-crackle-hum from the beam of light.

  And the unearthly music, which now had an eerie, throbbing quality. He had believed that it came from the beam of light, but now, as he squirmed shakily to his feet, it was obvious that the music echoed from the bottom of the stairs.

  He picked up his M4, moved to the gaping hole, and looked cautiously down. The glow beyond the smoke showed him that the stairs were now a tangle of twisted metal and bodies.

  Outraged, Lockhart slung his assault carbine over his shoulder. The right banister dangled from where its metal was anchored in concrete. It wobbled when he put his weight on it. Holding his breath, sweating, he climbed down the railing, hand over hand.

  At the bottom, he tried not to cough from the bitter smoke. After surveying the mangled bodies, he had no doubt that there was nothing he could do to help.

  He took a gas mask from a dead man and put it on. It made him feel smothered, but at least it stifled his need to cough. The smoke drifted past its lenses.

  The music continued pulsing.

  Some of the corpses had grenades. Lockhart took a few, then un- slung his M4 and inched forward, ready to shoot at any movement.

  The glow from the walls intensified. He inched along a hallway, reached an open door on the right, and threw a grenade into it, quickly ducking back. Amid the glare of the explosion, he heard glass and metal blowing apart.

  He continued through the swirling smoke and reached an open door on the left-the source of the music. Pulling a pin from another grenade, he was about to free the arming lever when a weak voice came from inside.

  “Don’t. I’m sick. All I want to do is listen to the music. Let me die listening to the music.”

  “You’re Halloway?” he replied without moving into the doorway.

  “Used to be.”

  “Used to be? That doesn’t make sense.”

  “Do you like vodka and orange juice?”

  “You’re still not making sense.”

  “You don’t taste vodka and orange juice?”

  “All I taste is smoke.”

  “The first time I got drunk, it was on vodka and orange juice,” the weak voice said, its owner having trouble breathing.

  “Well, this’ll be your last,” Lockhart replied angrily.

  “Please… just let me listen to the music a little longer. It’s all I have.” The voice sucked air. “I can’t even dance any longer.”

  “I don’t know what the hell you’re talking about, but I guarantee your dancing days are over.” Lockhart continued to hold the grenade, his fingers over the arming lever. “You shouldn’t have messed with the colonel’s project.”

  “The colonel’s a prick.”

  Lockhart hesitated. “You’re right about that.”

  He was suddenly aware that the floor felt unsteady.

  “Did you ever want to be a rock star?” Holloway managed to ask.

  Lockhart had once heard a man breathing through a hole in his throat. That same liquid wheezing sound was what he now heard.

  “Rock star? Wasn’t high on my list.”

  “What did you want to be?”

  “Never thought about it.” Unbidden, Lockhart remembered the Harley-Davidson he’d left a couple of miles away.

  As he prepared to throw the grenade, he frowned, feeling the walls tremble.

  “I didn’t know it was possible to bleed from so many places at once,” Halloway murmured, his voice sounding more gurgly. “I’m pretty much dead already. Just let me go listening to the music.”

  Amid the smoke, the roof vibrated, a chunk of concrete dropping from it. Lockhart had the sense that everything was somehow connected to the music.

  He imagined riding the Harley.

  The floor shifted enough that he had trouble keeping his balance.

  “Yeah,” Lockhart said, “Colonel Raleigh’s a prick. What you did, was it worth it?”

  “Hell, yes.” Halloway coughed up something thick.

  “Hell’s where you’re going. I doubt there’s music, though.”

  Lockhart threw the grenade into the room and stepped back, put- ting his hands over his ears. The blast shook him. He heard flying debris clatter from the room. What he didn’t hear any longer was the music.

  The corridor kept trembling. As more chunks fell from the walls and the ceiling, he turned and hurried as quickly as he could through the smoke. Hand over hand, he climbed the wobbling metal banister, fearful that it would snap.

  At the top, he heard the crackle-hiss-hum of the beam of light and emerged into its hovering glare. When he threw away the gas mask, he noticed that the air had the odor of an electrical fire.

  The earth vibrated.

  He ran through the three open gates, charging along the lane. All he could think of was the motorcycle and how he’d love to ride it forever.

  He stretched his legs farther, racing faster.

  When he was about a mile from the observatory, he felt the heat of an explosion behind him. The shock wave made him stagger. He looked over his shoulder and saw the observatory erupting. The dishes blew apart. The most dramatic detonation took place in the sky, like the hugest skyrocket he’d ever seen. But it seemed much farther away than a simple rocket could go.

  The only explanation he could think of
was that a satellite was exploding.

  76

  Raleigh felt a vibration.

  “Does the floor seem unsteady?” he asked the men in front of the electronic instruments. The earplugs made his voice sound distant.

  “Everything’s starting to tremble,” a man acknowledged. “I’m hearing some kind of hum.”

  “Push your earplugs in deeper.”

  “They’re in as far as they’ll go.”

  “Then use the noise-reducing headphones.”

  Raleigh and the rest of the team put them on.

  “I still hear a hum,” the man said faintly.

  On a video monitor, Raleigh saw the flames from the crashed helicopters. Otherwise the area was dark, people reacting in panicked confusion, the green of the night-vision camera making them look grotesque. Another monitor revealed how out of control the German shepherd had become. Jaws snapping, it lunged at its trainer.

  Shoot it, Raleigh urged.

  The trainer did in fact reach for a pistol under his shirt, but the dog’s snapping jaws made him lurch back and fall. The trainer fired once into the air as the animal leaped over him, yanked the leash free, and rushed into the night.

  “The hum’s getting worse,” someone said, his voice thickly muffled.

  “The table’s rattling.”

  “Jesus, my nose is bleeding.”

  The signal’s too strong! The shields aren’t working! Raleigh thought in alarm.

  On a different screen, a tidal wave of light streaked across the range- land, igniting the grass beneath it. A beam shot from it, rocketing to- ward the old airbase. It reached the hidden dish and sped through it in the direction of the observatory.

  Abruptly all the monitors went dark, the shields on the cameras failing.

  A man’s eyes dripped blood.

  Raleigh backed away.

  “Turn off the equipment!” somebody yelled.

  “No!” Raleigh shouted, continuing to step back. “Keep everything on as long as possible!”

  “My ears!”

  Someone vomited blood.

  Raleigh reached the entrance to the office, stepped inside, closed the steel door, and locked it. The room had three times the electromagnetic shielding that the rest of the facility had. He hurried to the monitors on his desk and watched the men outside.

  Some realized what Raleigh had done and rushed to the door, pounding on it. The frantic movement of their lips showed Raleigh that they begged to be let in. A man picked up an M4 that had a grenade launcher attached to it and pushed the others away.

  He fired at the door.

  Raleigh felt the concussion. On the monitors, he saw the smoke from the explosion and the damage the shrapnel had done to some of the team. But the door was intact. Screaming silently, the man fired another grenade, again with no effect on the door. But the pain that the explosion and the shrapnel inflicted on the rest of the team made someone pick up his carbine and shoot the man who held the grenade launcher.

  The man with the carbine then shot three other members of the team, proving that the force associated with the lights did indeed provoke irrational violence. Testing that theory was why Raleigh had made firearms easily available to them. A moment later, the man dropped the carbine and pressed his hands over his skull, his face contorting in agony.

  The monitors on Raleigh’s desk went dark, the shields on the cam- eras failing.

  Raleigh sank to the chair behind his desk. Stunned, he tried to tell himself that he’d truly never believed he would actually need to take refuge here. The shielding on the rest of the facility was so massive that he’d been confident it would hold. But there’d been only one way to test its limits.

  He looked at his watch. It was 9:47. A long time until sunrise. But hey, no big deal. I’ve got food and water to get through the night. It shouldn’t be a problem to wait until after dawn before I leave.

  The overhead light dimmed, the generator failing.

  Stay calm. If the generator fails, that’s no big deal, either. I’ll just put my head on the desk and do what’s normal at night: sleep. The time’ll speed by.

  Those poor bastards out there…

  The lights went out. Raleigh found himself immersed in the deepest darkness he’d ever experienced.

  I’m safe. That’s what matters. In the morning, I’ll have all the light I want.

  Sleep.

  When Raleigh put his head on the desk and closed his eyes, he saw imaginary speckles that seemed to be on the backs of his eyelids-a trick of the brain. He opened his eyelids, and the darkness seemed thicker.

  A slight ringing in his ears made him uneasy until he decided that the ringing was normal when ambient sound was blocked.

  It’s there all the time. Normally other sounds mask it.

  Even so…

  Could I be hearing the lights?

  No, he couldn’t allow himself to panic.

  Think of something else.

  Like what?

  But the answer came automatically.

  My grandfather.

  77

  Edward Raleigh never recovered from whatever had happened to him at the Rostov airbase on July 16, 1945. The officers who wrote the Army intelligence reports felt relieved. A man in a state of permanent catatonia wasn’t likely to tell anyone about a weapon of mass destruction that might be more powerful than the atomic bomb.

  With the awesome success of Oppenheimer’s project, the president and the military decided there wasn’t any point in trying to develop a backup, especially when its elements were so little understood and so destructively unpredictable.

  And unreliable. The lights didn’t reappear for two months, and then only dimly.

  Japan’s unconditional surrender reinforced the decision. One super- weapon was sufficient to control the world’s destiny. But then the Soviets developed their own atomic bomb, and as the nuclear race intensified, the research done at Rostov was so well buried that it was forgotten.

  Edward Raleigh spent the next twenty-five years in an Army mental hospital, visited every day by his wife, whom he’d married while he was stationed at the Presidio in San Francisco in 1939. Their son was named Robert. A devout Roman Catholic, Edward’s wife refused to remarry. To do that, she would need to divorce her husband, and she believed that a divorce would damn her soul.

  In 1970, the mounting expenses of the Vietnam War forced the U.S. military to cut back on full-time medical care for personnel whose treatment went as far back as the two World Wars. Edward’s wife moved him from the hospital to her apartment, where her life gained greater purpose as she devoted herself to taking care of him.

  By then her son was twenty-nine and himself a father with a son named Warren. Growing up, Warren visited his grandfather and was by turns horrified and fascinated by the bearded old man who sat unmoving in a rocking chair in the living room, always wearing pajamas and a housecoat, always watching television-although if his grandfather was aware of anything he watched, no one could tell.

  Warren was thirteen when a stroke killed his grandmother. At the funeral, everyone said she had been a saint. He never forgot how in- tensely his parents talked about what to do with the “old man,” as they called him.

  “We don’t have room,” his mother insisted, while his father, a war- rant officer in the Army, argued that they didn’t have the money to put the old man in a facility.

  In the end, Grandfather came to live in their small unit at Fort Bragg, and Warren was given the responsibility of taking care of him after school while his mother went to her part-time job at the base’s PX. Warren didn’t mind. His friends were allowed to come over, and they weren’t too grossed out by the wrinkled, shrunken, white-haired, white-bearded old man. He just sat there, watching whatever television programs they decided to watch.

  He never moved on his own, but he could be made to walk if he was prompted, and he could be made to chew if food were put into his mouth. Also, he was pretty good about going to the toilet. All Warr
en needed to do was lead him into the bathroom every two hours, pull down his pajama bottoms, sit him down, and come back five minutes later. If the old man needed his rear end cleaned, Warren used a wet brush. Disgusting, sure, but Warren discovered that he could get used to a lot of things in exchange for the new video game his father let him buy every week.

  One day after school, Warren was alone-which was what it felt like whenever he was in the living room with his grandfather- playing a video game that had a lot of floating, drifting balls of light. His grandfather shocked the hell out of him by speaking.

  “The lights.”

  Warren dropped the video game control, turned toward his grand- father, and gaped.

  “I saw them,” the old man said.

  “You can talk?” Warren asked in astonishment.

  His grandfather didn’t seem to hear him. Instead the old man just kept talking, his voice hoarse. A lot of it Warren didn’t understand- stuff about Texas, an airbase, lights, and an underground research station.

  “Rostov.” Whatever that meant.

  “Ears bleed. Nose. Tear ducts. Burns. Time sped up. God help me. Alice.” That was the name of Warren’s grandmother. His grandfather began to weep.

  Warren ran to get a Kleenex and wiped his grandfather’s bearded face.

  “It’s all right, Grandpa. I’ll help you. What are you trying to say?”

  Warren’s grandfather stopped talking then. It was days before Warren realized that when he’d wiped his grandfather’s tears, he had stood between his grandfather and the balls of light in the video game.

  His parents thought he was lying.

  “No, he talked for five minutes,” Warren insisted.

  “What about?”

  Warren told them.

  “Lights,” his father said. “My mother talked about the research he’d been doing down in Texas, something about lights.”

  “Texas?”

  “Outside a nothing town called Rostov. His father had something to do with lights, too. Way back in the First World War. I never figured it out.”

 

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